First announced in September, acclaimed and celebrated music artist Flying Lotus, and filmmaker Eddie Alcazar partnered up to form the independent film finance and production outfit, Brainfeeder Films, and revealed that the newly formed operation's first feature film would be titled "Kuso," which Flying Lotus was to direct under his real name, Steven Ellison, from a script he co-wrote with David Firth and Zach Fox.

Starring Iesha Coston, Zack Fox, Hannibal Buress, The Buttress, Tim Heidecker, and Mali Matsuda, "Kuso's" synopsis reads: Broadcasting through a makeshift network of discarded televisions, this story is tangled up in the aftermath of Los Angeles’ worst earthquake nightmare. Travel between screens and aftershocks into the twisted lives of the survived.

We learned this week that the film is set to make its World Premiere at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival next month, in the MIDNIGHT section, which includes genre films, from horror and comedy, to works that defy genre classification. Flying Lotus' 'Kuso" falls into the latter category if what I'm hearing about it from those in-the-know is true.

Hiro Murai, who has apparently seen the film already, tweeted the below in reaction to it (by the way, Murai is a frequent collaborator of Donald Glover's; in addition to directing music videos for Glover's rapper alter ego Childish Gambino, Murai also directed most of the episodes of his hit FX series "Atlanta"):

.@flyinglotus is on some Black Jodorowsky / Funky Forest / Salad Fingers shit with his movie. I feel completely insane from watching it

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Shadow and Act is a website dedicated to cinema, television and web content of Africa and its global Diaspora. With daily news, interviews, in-depth investigations into the audiovisual industry, and more, Shadow and Act promotes content created by and about people of African descent throughout the world.